Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 1, Number 241, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 March 1871 — Page 3
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Eiise went home with a new and strange happiness at her heart—a happiness that changed her nature and influenced every day of her life, aud made her amiable, and soft, and loving, aud kind, and considerate, and anxious to please and ready to serve and help others.
Presently people began to remark the alteration in the miller's daughter, aud to tell her how different she was from formerly, and the maidens sought her out and talked to her about their lovers, and the youths declared that Elise, the miiler's daughter, was the nicestyirl that side of the Rhine, and Carl learned to think how liferent she was from Gretchen, and he learned to love her, aud through the Fatherland there was not so happy a girl as Elise. And all this time she never once saw her own face, but turned away her head when she dipped her paiIs in the stream, aud through all the miller's house there was not to be found a looking glass. She longed (ah, how much to see herself in her new garb of beauLy but she remembered the old woman's warning and conquered her desire. in the spring time came her wedding day, and early in the sweet, fresh morning she was married to Carl, and the young flowers peeped out to see her face as she passed by, aud the tender grass kissed her feet as she went along, and the birds sang out greeting, aud even the light leathery clouds seemed to stoop over her head, as if with their shadowy hands they blessed her on her bridal day. 'Ah, happy Elise! "Thou art so changed!" said Carl. "Thy face is so different from what it formerly was. It does not seem to me that it is possible thou art the same Elise. 1 used to pass without even looking back to gaze on thee but to-day in thy bridal veil thou arc a sweet picture, which memory will paint on my heart forever."
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A maiden lived on the banks of the Rhine with her father, the miller. Now the maiden, whose name was Eiise, was not pretty, and she was cross and fretful, for she grieved for her own lack of beauty and thought that none would ever care for her 011 account of the few graces Nature had given to her so she did not even try to please, and yet her heart was very large and very kindly. She spent half her time in front of her looking-glass, lamenting her plainness and thinking how impossible it was that Carl would ever learn to love her, while Gretchen, who was so fair and pretty that she was called "The Daughter of Spring," dwelt near her. Eiise was not loved, for she had nev^r tried to gain love. She always fancied that it would be in vain to endeavor to please, in vain to be kind, and thoughtful and loving. When Nature had so slighted her, who could care for her or think of her, or be interested in her? "Ah!" she sighed one day, "if I could but have Gretchen's beauty, I should be the happiest yirl in the Fatherland, for then I should not fear any rival and Curl, sunny-haired Carl, might love me." IJut Carl never came near her now, and only thought of her as cross and fretful Eli.se, and wished Gretchen had had less vanity with her pretty face, and a rather large heart in her slim body.
One day—it was the time of the vintage—Eiise went down to the Rhine to bring in water, and as she had dipped her pails in the clear ripples she saw her own face reflected, and turned away wretched and discontented. She sat down on a rocky stone and watched the sunlight playing on the castle-crowned hills and listened to the far-oil' song of the workers in the vineyards and she thought of Carl, who was there, and of Gretchen, who was there also. "Ah, me!" she sighed, "what a gift is beauty!" "Elise," said a voice, aud looking up she saw an old woman—a very old, deformed woman—standing near to her. "Elise," she said, "I will tell you the secret of beauty, and you shall obtain all that you long for so much. Go home and never look in a glass, never see the reflection of your own face in the water, never once again gaze on your own features and you will grow pretty—so pretty that all will wonder at the change, and Carl—Carl will learn to love you." "Oh, will never see my face again as long as I live—never, never!" said Eiise. "JJut are you sure, quite sure "Quite sure," replied the dame "but, remember, if you once see your own face, your ugliness will return. Now, go home and be light of heart and every day your lack of beauty will grow less, aud every day more love will hover around you." "But how shall I know that it is true if I may not see my face?" asked Elise. "Can you not tell by the altered manner of those around you?" said the dame. "Oil, yes," said Elise "how I will watch them!"
Elise felt herself thrilled with happiness, but never once told the secret of that change, though she herself did not know that the secret lay in her own changed nature.
Now presently they were all feasting and Elise, longing to be alone for a few miuutes with her wonderful happiness, crept down to the side of the Rhine, and thought over the past.. "Ah, and he said I am so altered, too! Happy Elise, thou are indeed altered! Aud he said how pretty I looked in my bridal veil. Do I, I wonder? What would I not give to see myself!"
Elise was forgetting, as she longed to see herself, how strict had been the old woman's warning. She stood on the edge of the water with her face turned away but her vanity kept saying to her, "Look once, for a single moment, "Elise,
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83T Yearly advertisers will be allowed monthly changes of matter, tree of charge. The rates of advertising in the WEEKLY GAZETTE: will bo half the rates charged in the DAILY. «MT Advertisements in both the DAILY and WEEKLY, will be charged full Daily rates and one-half the Weekly rates.
Legal advertisements, one dollar per are foi each insertion in WEEKLY. tr Local notices, 10 cents per line. No item, I /,v iver short, inserted ill local column lor less •lia.in 0cents. iiar .\I.trriage and Funeral notices, S1.00.
Aif Society meetings and Religious notices, 2o centseacli insertion, invariably in advance. ift*T S. .U. PKfTENGILL, & Co., i7 Park Row, N*w York,are our sole agents in that city, and see authorized to contract for advertising at our lowest rates.
Eiise's Vanity.
The vanity of the fair sex, it is said, is of the same age as the sex itself. A clever writer, in defending this trait of tiie feminine character, has said that it consti tutes its greatest charm that without it the sex would lose half its attraction and in support of thi« theory there is the old quaint story of the German maiden a history which is so tender and pretty that it is worth rescuing from the forgotten legends of the Fatherland.
thyself on thy bridal day but
she lie-itated and longed, and wondered if punishment would really follow if she ^looked. "It cannot make any differ
ence,"
she thought, and she moved her
head a little way—a very little way —round—till she could ju-itsee the shape of her head reflected in the water, and it seemed quete srange to her, for she had "not seen it for so long. "I must, oh, I must see the face my
Carl loves," she said and forgetting the happiness she might lose in thia offering to her vanity, she turned and looked at her reflection in the water, and she saw—what? the same plain face she remembered long ago the same, the very same, without one feature altered
With a scream of despair she tottered firward a step too far and before she could recover herself, she fell into the water, which had shown her the dreadful truth. The tide bore her away, and never again was seen the miller's daughter—Carl's young bride. Alas for vanity ?—German
Legend.
MEDICAL
PLSO'S CURE
FOR
CONSUMPTION WILLneglected
cure pulmonaay complaints, difficult breathing, throat diseases and COUGHS which it terminate in serious and too often fatal diseases of tbf- lungs.
Try it. If it fails to satisfy you of its efficacy the agent will refund your money.
A FAIll OFFER.
The Proprietors of Piso's
CURE FOE CONSUMPTION
Agree to repay the price to all who try the remedy and receive from it no benetit. Thus if itdoes no goodit COSTS NOTHING, and if it cures one is satisfied.
PISO'S CURE is very pleasant to the taste, ana does not produce nausea. It is intended to soothe and not irritate. Itaures a Cough much quicker than any other medicine, and yet does not dry it up.
If you have "only a Cough," do not let it become something worse, but cure it immediate iy.
Piso's Cure for Consumption
being a certain remedy for the worst of human ailments, must of necessity be the best remedy tor Cough and diseases of the throat which il neglected too oiten terminate tatally.
TA "S7.1/»+ That50,000 persons die anil (I tlvL nuaily in the United States of Consumption.
T-f it" That 25,COO persons die anil l^J (I nuaily from heridatory Consumption.
It is a Fact
That 25,000 persons die annually from Cough ending in Consumption.
It is a Fact""" It is a Fact
ht cough often
terminates in Consumption.
cured.'
Tf ici nf That recent and protracted il 115 il tlL I coughs can be cured.
Tf
Tliat
Piso's Cure has curod
J.l la (I iltt and will cure these diseases.
It is a Fact
ranted.
Sold by Druggists everywhere. E. T. HAZELTINE, Proprietor, Warren, Pennsylvania.
New Combination!!
xorve l*ower WiiJiout Phosphorus. A Steal Sedative without Opium or Kcaction. Innocent even iu the
Maath of Infants!
20 Drops is the Largest Dose.
Cures Sick Headache in 20 Minutes on national Principles.
It is a sure Cure for
IIE UMA TISM, NE URALGIA, DEAFNESS, BURNS, SPRATNS, CORNS, TETTER, SALT
RIIEUM. GATHERED BREASTS, &c.
J. D. PARK, of Cincinnati, says: "I cured many cases of sre throat with the trie Oil' and always Yeep it in my house/
have Elec-
[From the largest Drug House in Boston.] We have sold a large quantity of Dr, Smith's "Electric Oil," and it is spoken of only with unqualified praise.
Good Report from Every Bottle.
WEEKS A PORTER, Wholesale 154 Washington Street, Roston.
ists,
Drug
It cures Sick Headache in twenty minutes, Deafness, Salt Itneum, Rheumatism, Erysipelas, Piles, Croup, Neuralgia, Cankers, Felons, Burns, Cuts, itc. Twenty drops the largest dose. No Alcohol, Capsicum,
Campuor, or Water it.
[From the Largest Drug House in Boston.] We have sold a large quantity of Dr. Smith's "Electric Oil," which is spoken of with unqualified praise. Good reports from everv bottle.
WEEKS & POTTER.
WholesaleDru^gists, 154 Washington st. Boston Thousands of dollais are lost in time by farmers and business men, when a few dimes expended for the proper remedy at the right time, would have saved all pain and trouble. Pain is but a friendly admonition,
and nature warns
us in time, S me men are skeptical and seltish, others hopeful and generous none have the right to disregard the guttering child or the poor or ignorant. The rich CAN travel a thousand miles and pay SI,000 fees, cure or no cure.
BUT WHAT OF THE POOR?
When on earth, Christ invariably commended every good work the act of the Good Samaritan, and all useful and efficient labor for man's amelioration, and He devoted His
EVERY WAKING HOUR
to unselfish efforts—no time for malignant fault-finding and petty jealousy. In this soirit should every one welcome a real benefaction, like DII.GALUTIA. B. SMITH'S
"El^ECTfiUC Oil,,*'
of Philadelphia, a remedial so unlike any other known, as to attract the instant attention ol medical men, and all sufferers.
The great cures daily made are
NOT MIRACUL.OUS,
yet seem like enchantment. Considerable sums have been offered for the preparation—and some dealers sell as high as 100 to 200 bottles in a single day.
THIS ELECTRIC OIL,.]
is just, what it FITKPORT.S TO BE, no deceptionno misnomer—may be tried on the spot.
DR. SMITH
frequcnlly cures men and women, Doctors and Druggists, Ministers and Lawyers of
DEATHLY SICK HEADACHE,
within 20 minutes, in the Drug Stores, when color soon appears on the pallid cheek, the eye begins to brighten up, and cheerfulness takes the place of abject misery.
It is true that Dr, Smith advertises very largely yet, even thai by ?io means alone accounts lo.t such rapid and continuous demand. The oil cures, which the people find out.
STRONG A ARMSTRONGS
of Cleveland sold 193 bottles in one day. WEEKS POTTER, the eminent Druggists of Boston, seld 430 in oncdav. GEORGE WEIMKR, of Akron, Ohio, 5 dozen and others in proportion.
[From the largest Drug House west of St. Louis.] ST. JosEni, MARCH 12. DR SMITH—Send us SO dozen small and 20 dozen large size of your "Electric Oi\" It has made a number of cures here and ^es good satisfaction. HARDY & CU.
It cures and that Is why it sells. PROVIDENCE, May 10.
DR SMITH—Dear
Sir We are entirely out of
Dollar size oi your "Electric Oil." Not a single bottle 1 ten gross
hottYe in the store. Send five gross large and ten cross small. We are having! Yours, truiy
18 wv
large stiles.
'J. BALCH «FC SON.
WRENCHES.
A. G. COES & CO.,
{Successors to L. fc A. G. Coe.s,)
W O E S E A S S Manufacturers of the Genuine
5
COES SCREW WRENCHES
With A. G. Coes' Patent Lock Fender. KttabHshedin .839
MEDICAL.
A Cataplasm of Rhubarb.
LAID
upon the pit of the stomach of a child, will cause the bowels to be emptied, and alloes kept in contact with a raw surface will produce same effect as if the medicine had been taken into the stomach. So said the great Dr. Clutterback. Very many persons know the operation of croton oil when placed upon the tongue, to say the least, it is speedy. Purgatives in some sha e, are indispensable in the practice of medicine. Many diseases are incurable without them and all of the simple uisoruers of the system are benefitted by their use. The great desideratum in their administration has been to get one which has either laxa tive or purgative, as was needed—always mild but always efficient—and the use of which did not make it necessary to continue its use. This has at last been done. EDWAKD WILDER'S FAM ILY PILLS fulfill all the requirements of the case. They area laxative, yet sure purgative yet mild. In small doses, they meet the first want in large doses, they fulfill the latter but in whatever quantity given, they create no necessity for they create no morbid state of the alimentary canal tube, butleave it cleansed and urge it to renewed health. They are, in brief, a°b!essing to the individual who suffers from constipation and needs a laxative, and are indispensable to him who is parched with fever and requires a purgative. Use them, all you who value health.
llelmintliology.
A distinguished physiologist hasdeclared that it seems to be a principle of nature that every situation capable of supporting organic bodies hould be peopled with them. The huge whale is often driven to madess by an almost invisible member of the tribe of vermes. The history ol Helmintliology abounds in illustrations of the influence of worms in the production of disease and in the exasperation of their symptoms, The frequency of worms in the bodies of men, their obviousness to the senses, together with their common connection with enfeebled and morbid states of the animal economy, all tend to render them an object of interest from the remotest periods. The very ablest minds have been devoted to the study of these entoza with ihe view of discovei'ing some substance which was capable of speedily, safely and permanently expelling them irom the human sytem. EDWARD WILDER'S MOTHER'S WORM SYRUP is a true vermicide, a geunine worm destroyer, a bona fide vermifuge. Its taste is delightful, its effects are quick, its results unfailing. It is free from danger. No intestinal worm can live in its presense. Mothers! destroy the worms which infest your little ones, with this deiightful syrup..
Dr. Laennec.
This renowned Frenchman did more perhaps to clear up the mysteries which before his time had invested the nature of chest diseases than any other physician who ever lived. Yet with all his skill in detecting the nature and form oi the malady before him, he was sadly deficient in his knowledge of remedies. He drew vivid pictures of coughs, colds, pleurisy, consumption, croup, bronchitis, catarrhs and all the affections of the air passages still he left but few words concerning their treatment. The youngest physician to-day knows better how to manage any one of these chest troubles he knows the value of the wild cherry he is acquainted with its supreme virtues he is aware of the many potent agents which enter into the combination of Edward WUders Compound Extract, of Wild Cherry, and knows that with the use of this truly great medicine he is fully master of the situation, He has no fear in the presence of croup, no misgivings at the advance of bronchitis he grapples wtth consumption, and subdues every cough, cold, or catarrh. Hence every family should always have this invaluable medicine at hand.
Indigestion,
"Which makes sleep a pain, and turns its balm to wormwood," is, we all know, the most, common of all the disorders of the stomach. It is also the most obstinate. It has been the most written about. No disease presents such various, contrary, and incompatible symptoms. They contradict all the laws of order,constancy and inconsistency, which regulate natural events they bother the doctor, and can only be read by him who is skilled in the book of nature. It is self evident that the dill'erent forms of indigestion are to be met by corresponding methods ol cure. It has been said that the perfection of medical skill is the talent of applying to each individual case its precise and as it were, its individual cure. This is the object which every conscientious physician pursues unceasingly, and never can rest satisfied until he has overtaken. Edward Wilder's Stomach Bitters, their body being the purest of copper-distilled whisky, makes this object attainable alike to all. They area specific—the disease specifying the remedy, not the remedy the disease. They are a combination of substances which meet the speciality oi the disorder by a corresponding speciality oi cure. They should be kept in every well-regu-lated family they are indispensable to health
Gtaudianna River.
The British army wnen it advanced on Talavara and fought the celebrated battle, which was followed by a retreat into the plains, lost more men by the malarial diseases contracted on the banks of the Gaudiana than by the bullets of the enemy. They died by thousands All Europe believed that the innading army was extirpated. Yet malarial diseases are no more common iu Europe than in our own country they exist throughout the length and breadth of our land—everywhere at some time and in some shape are we made to feel the sickening influence of miasm. The three great actors in this equation of disease are solar heat, moisture, and vegetable decomposition. The tiio, if separated, are harmless together they are more potent for evil than any other known agents so long as they exist, just so long will we have need of a medicine which will overcome their pernicious effects, so long will it be necessary to have a remedy capable of meeting and beating the insidious enemy. Of all known agents for this purpose, none is to compare With Edioard Wilder's Chill Tonic, the master of every form aud variety and grade and degree of malarial disease and of miasmatic poison. Try it, all you who are suffering from any form of ague and fever or chills and fever, as a cure is guaranteed in every case.
St. Louis Hospital, Paris.
This anciept institution is one ol the largest, and to the medical student, the most interesting of the many public charities which adorn the gay capitol of the French. It receives within its walls annually thousands of sick poor.
A
considerable portion of the building is
set apart tor patients suffering with diseases of the skin, and every patient, old or oung, is taking potash in some shape, and Honduras sarsaparilla in some form. They were esteemed by the renowned physicians who had tharge ol the skin department as well-specific in almost every variety of cutaneous disease, whether of rheumatic or scrofulous or simple origin. They were given in tetter, ringworm, nettle-ash, roseash, pimples, scrofuia, ulcers, old sores, falling of the hair, etc. In all they did good, in u-ost they effected a cure. But it has remained for Edward Wilder,s SarsapariUa and Potash to perform the most remarkable cures awarded to any known medicine. It possesses virtues shared by no other combination of these substances. It is a therapeutic marvel. Against all the diseases at wiiich it is aimed It is sirap^ resistless it never fails. See to it that you suffer not one day longer with any of the ills which it cures. Get it at once.
EDWARD WILDER,
SOLE PROPRIETOR, 1
215 MAIN STREET, MARBLE FRONT
^LOUISVILLE, KY. rv .r octisdr
1
WE
vrr*rr.s-3i£
FUlceratedcure.
—v
or any case of Blind, Bleeding, Itching, or Piles that l)e Binyrs'M I'lie Kennedy fails to It is prepared expressly to cure the Piles aud nothing else, and has cured cases of over twenty years' standing. Sold by all Druggists. ,'•''
VIA. FUGA
De King's Via Fusra is the pure juice of Barks, Herbs, Roots, and Berries,
CONSUMPTION.
Inflamation of the Lungs all Liver Kidney and Bladder diseases, organic Weakness, Female afflictions, General Debility, and all complaints of the Urinary organs, iu Male and Female, producing Dyspepsia, Costlveness, Gravel Dropsy and Scrofula,which inostgenerally terminate in Consumptive Decline. It purifies aud enriches the Bl. od, the Billiary, Glandular and Secretive system corrects and strengthens the nervous and muscular forces. It acts like a charm on weak nerves, debiliated females, both ywung and old. None should be without it. Sold everywhere.
Laboratory—142 Franklin Street, Baltimore.
PUBS WHITE LEAD.
ESTABLISHED 1837.
SCKSTEK, HILLS A CO.,
5008^
mark
E N I A N
PUBE WHITE
FIRST PREMIUM,
LARGE SILVER MEDAL,
warded by the Industrial Exposition for superiority over all other White Lead exhibited.
OFFER THE ABOVE BRAND OF W1IITF LEAD TO THE PUBLIC WITH the POSITIVE ASSURANCE that it is perfectly PURE, and will give
ONE OUNCE OF GOLD
For every ounce of ADULTERATION that it may be found to contain. 8®* For sale by dealers enerally.
Grand Peremptory Sales
OF
We will carry over no winter stock. We have made tall the profit we contemplate on Heavy Goods,
AND NOW COMES THE CLEARANCE!
IT HAS COMMENCED!
CORNER OF MAIN AND FIFTH STREETS.
MEDICAL.
s$l,000 REAVAKI3
TO T1IK LADIES. BALTIMORE, February 17,1870.
I have bef a sufierer from Kidney Complaint producing Gravel and those afflictions peculiar to women, prostrating my physical and nervous systems, wilh a tendency to Consumptive Decline. I was dispondent arid gloomy. I tried all "Standard Medicines" with no relief, until I took De Bing's wonderful Remedy. I have taken six bottles, and am now free from that combination of nameless complaints. How thankiui I am to be well.
DR J. LAVINA C. LEAMING,
dly Oxford Street.
TAILOBm
W A E N
TAIXiOR.
•-.:••• 2 rCorner of Second and ilciin Streetst
(Opposite the Stewart House.)
GentM' Clothing Hade in th® Best Style •WCutting done Promptly. 107d3m
rC HOLES A.
RECIPE FOR THE CIJRE OF
HOG CHOLERA,
Sent with full direction for ONTS1 IWLLAR and Stamp. Address, E. H. STIVERS, Madison, Jones co., Iowa.
P. SL Also, cares CHICKEN CHOLERA. 13w3
Tuell, Ripley & Deming.
FfRNT PKF.MIt'M
oi —«•-.« H^—' WHITE
ECKSTEIN, HIIXS & I O., Cincinnati,
NOTE.—Consumers will consult their INTEREST by bearing in mind tlio-t a large proportion of the article sold as PURE WHITE LEAD is adulterated to the extent of from 50 to 90 per cent. and much of it does not contain a particle of Lead. llddwom
For Sale by GULICK. A BERRY, Wholesale Druggists.
RETAIL EEY GOODS.
L£AP
DRY I«!
•AT
TUELL, RIPLEY & DEMUR'S
We are Forcing Sales to Make a Clean Sweep!
SHAWLS, ('LOAUI^VK,
BLANKETS, HEAVY lUSLOfS,
MBK CAMC®, JMMESS GOO!$
FLEECED HOSE, GL0YES, FLAOTELS, &€., MUST 00!
Whatever prices may he advertised by others, our's will he found lower hy comparison.
WESTERN LANDS.
Homestead and Fre-emption.
Istatement,plainlyaprintedfortheinformation
HAVE compiled full, concise and complete
of persons, intending to take up a Homestead or Pre-Emption in this poetry of the West, embracing Iowa, Dakota, and Nebraska and other sections. It explains how to proceed to secure 160 acres of Rich Farming Land for Nothirg. six months before you leave your home, in tne most healthful climate. In short it contains just such instructions as are needed by those intending to make a Home and Fortune in the Free Lands of the West. I will send one of these printed Guides to any person for 25 cents. The information alone, which, it gives is worth S5 to anybody. Men who came here two and three years ago, and took a farm, are to-day independent.
To YOUNG MEN.
This country is being crossed with numerou Railroads from every direction to Sioux: City Iowa. Six Railroads will be made totnis city within one year. One is already In operation connecting us with Chicago and the U. P. Railroad and two more will be completed before spring, connecting us with Dubuque and McGregor, direct. Three more will be completed within a year, connecting us direct with St. Paul, Minn., Yankton, Dakota, and Columbus, Nebraska, on the U. P. Railroad. The Missouri River gives us the Mountain Trade. Tcus it will be seen that no section of country offers such unprecedented advantages for business, speculation and making a fortune, for the country is being populated, and towns and cities are being built, and fortunes made almost beyond belief. Every man who takes a homestead now will have a railroad market at his own door, And any enterprising young man with a small capital can establish himself in a permanent paying business, if he selects the right location and right branch of trade. Eighteen years residence in the western country, and a large portion of the time employed as a Mercantile Agent in this country, has made me familiar with all the branches of business and the best locations in this country. For one dollar remitted to me will give truthful and definite answers to all questions on this subject desired by such persous. Tell them the best place to locate, and what business is overcrowded and what branch is neglected. Address,
DANIEL
gC0TT
S. C. Commissioner of Emigration,
171 Box 1H5. Sioux CITY, Iowa
DISTILLERS.
WAISH, BROOKS & KELLOGG,
Successors to
^si SAMUEL M. MURPHY & CO.f CINCINNATI t' DISTILLERY, OFFICE STORES, S. W. cor. Kilgour and 17 and 19 West Second
East Pearl sts. street. S Distillers ot Cologne Spirits, Alcohol & Domestic Liquors, and dealers in
Fare Bonrbon and Rye Whiskies. IdSm
LIFE INSTOA1TOE.
O O I I
THX EMPIBE
Mutual Life Insurance Oo.
OF NEW YORK.
Has achieved a success without a parallel In the history of Life Insurance!
Cheapest Life Insurance Company in the World!
A Life Policy, covering $10,000, can be obtained from this Reliable and Progressive Company which will cost the insured (aged So) only 8185.80,
Without any Small Addition for Interest.
This policy will hold good for two years without further payments, so that the cash payment of a $10,000 policy in this
Company will be equa
to only 897.90 per year. A large number of policies have already taken by some of the best citizens in this candi date for public favor, which is destined to do a large business here, and why should it not, for for notice some of its liberal and distinctive eatures
Ordinary Whole-life Policies are Absolutely Non-forfeitable from the Payment of the First, Annual Premium.
All Restrictions upon Travel and Residence are Removed, and no Permits Required.
No Accumulation of Interest or Loan.° of Deferred Premiums, and no Increase of Annual Payments on any (.'lass of Policies.
The EMPIRE has organized a Board ol Insurance, consisting of some of our best and most reliable citizens, to whom all desiring Life Insurance would do well to refer for further information, before taking policies elsewhere. Call at the office of the Board
On Ohio Street, between 3d and 4th,
Or upon any of the following gentlemen, who are members of the Board, ami who will give any information desired:
W. H. STEWART, Sheriff. Dr. W. D. MULL, Physician. A. F. FOUTS, Liveryman. Hon. G. F. COOICERLY, Mayor. L. SEEBURGER, Butcher. M. SCHOEMEHL, City Treasurer. W. W. JOHNSON, Physician.:
9
J, H. DOUGLASS,
idly
Manager Western Indiana!
BEFBIBEBATOB. WASTE MONET
On a poorly made,
IMPERFECT. UNVENTILATED ICE CHEST. OF FOREIGN MAKE,
When, for the same, or less price, you can pro« cure one of
JOSEPH W. WAME'S
Celebrrted Patent Self-Ventilating
AMERICAN REFRIGERATORS,
WHICH
are the only ones that have stood the test of time, several thousand of them having gone into successful use auring the past seven years, while the various other patents that have, from time to time, been introduced in competition with them, have invariably failed. The largest, most varied, and best assortment in the West-, at the salesroom ot
Joseph W. Wayne,
Manufacturer of
Patent Refrigerators, Improved Beer and Ale Coolers, and Ice Chests Of all kinds,
SSI WEST FIFTH ST., IcNjm CINICNNATI.
RUBBER GOODS.
INDIA RUBBER GOODS.
MACHINE BELTING,
ENGINE AND HYDRANT HOSE,
Steam Packing, Be Dts and Shoes, Clothing,Carriage and Nurser.v Cloths, Druggists' Goods, Combs, Syringes, 1'reast Pumps, Nipples, AcStationery Articles, Elastic Bands, Pen and Pencil Cases, Rulers, Inks, Ac. Piano CoverR, Door Mats, Balls and Toys, and every other article made of India Rubber.
A1 kinds of goods made to order for mechanical and manufactured purposes. All goods sold at manufacturing prices.
SAW WORKS.
PASSAIC SAW WORKS,
NEWARK, NEW JERSEY,
[Trade Mark challenge RXB.]"
RICHARDSON BROS..
MANUFACTURERSSuperiorSteel,
PAPEB.
The Leading Paper House
OF THE WEST.
8K11£B
A
Manufacturers t»nd Wholesale
PAPER DEALERS,
230 and 232 Walnut Street'
CINCINNAT:. HIO»
Proprietors of
"Franklin" and "Fair Grove" Mills,
HAMILTON, OHIO.!
We keep on hand the largest-assortment In f. West, of
Printers' and Binders'
O S O
Such as
Bill Heads, Letter and Note Heads, Statements of Account,
Bills of Lading, Dray Tickets, Embossed Note Paper,
ldGrn
BART & HICKCOX,
Agents lor all the Principal Manufacturers ld6m 49 West Fourth st., Cincinnati.
MACHINERY.
B. BALL & CO.j
W O E S E A S S •.--'Manufacturers of
YVooUvorth's, Daniels and Dimension Planers.
Xvv'OHiVlllgi JJLClUU liUllilgf fT vww
WAlso,
111
and a variety of other Machines for working
the best Patent Door, Hub and Rail Car Morticing Machines in the world. »*r Send for our Illustrated Catalogue,
Tempered Ma
chine Ground, Extra Cast Circular, Mill, Muly, Gang, Pit, Drag and Cross Cut Saws. Also, Hand Panel Ripping, Butcher, Bow, Back. Compass, and every description of Light hawi, oi the very best quality.
Every saw is warranted perfect challenges inspection. Warranted ot uniform good temper. Ground thin on back and gauged.
BRASS WORKS.
BRijF^TEOWARBS,
Manufacturers of
PLUMBERS' BRASS WORK
'ir- Of every description, and superior
CAST ALE PUMPS
And dealer In
PLUMBERS' MATERIALS,
•^Corporations and
Gas
dlj
Ball Tickets, Flat Note, Cap Letter, Folio, Demy, Medium, Royai,
Super Roy a and Imperial, Colored Poster,
Cover and Label Paper* Envelopes and Blotting Pap*
Book, News and Wrapping Paper*
Of our own manufacture, all of which we olle at the lowest market price. .Samples sent fr'' of oiiarfre.
tltl) STOCK.
Our stock is from the best Eastern mannfacturers, and will be found equal to any made in the country. Particular attention 1* called to our large variety ot'
Favorite Blanks and Bristol Sheets,
which einbracas all the desirable grades in use We have the largest variety of sizes and qualities of any house in the West, and our arrangements with manufacturers enable us to sell at Eastern prices. Customers will ilnd it to theii advantage to examine our stock before purchasing elsewhere.
Samples sent free of charge.
WIDER UrCAJLX.
Manufacturers and Wholesale.
A E E A E S
•230 and 232 Walnut Street,
,iai:r CINCINNATI.
GRATE BAR
E N
Furnace Grate Bar,
FOR --'V -W :f.
STEAMBOATS,
STATIONARY FURNACES, ETC.:
RECEIVEDU.S.theSilver
theHighestPremiumsever award
ed in the (a Medal,) and "honorable mention at Paris Exposition." Guaranteed more durable, and to make more steam with less fuel than any other Bar in use.
The -superiority of these Bars over others is owing to the distribution of the metal in such a mannerthat all strain in consequence ot expansion from heat is relieved, so that they will neither warp nor break. They give, also, niore ^air surface for draft, and are at least one-third lighter than any other Bars, and save 15 to 30 per cent, in fuel. They are now in use in more than 8.000 places,comprisingsomeoft largest steamships, steamboats and manufacturing companies in the United States. No alternation of Furnace requb ed. BARBAROUX A CO.,
Louisville, Kentucky,
Sole Manufacturers, for the South & "VV es Alo, builders of Steam Engines, Mill Machin-
cry' 8'AVD
WKOlfeHT IRON BRIDGES.-,
MACHINE CARDS.
SARGENT CARD CLOTHING CO. WORCESTER, MASS.
Manufacturers ol
COTTON, AYOOL
AND
."V'V
Flax Machine Caru Clothing
OI every Variety, Manufacturers' Supplies, Car ihg Machines, Etc. I A N a S in a so lX tion lurni.sht'd to order.
EDWIN S. LAWRENCE,
Idvl Superintendent.
LATHES, ETC.
WOOD, LIGHT A 0„
Manufacturers of
ENGINE LATHES,
From 16 to 100 inch Swing, and from fi to :i feet long.
PLANERS
To Plane from 4 to 30 feet long, fiom -24 to 00 inches wide..
NASMYTH'S STEAM HAMMERS.
GUN
MACHINERY, Mill Work, Shafting and Hangers, Patent Self-oiling Box. Warehouse, 107 Liberty street, New York City. Manufactory, Junction Shop, Worcester, Maseeh uset.ts. Idly
WJER
NEW JERSEY TV1RE MILLS.
HEIR1 ROBERTS.
Manufacturer ol
REFINED IKON WIRE, Market and Stone W ire,
BRIGHTPailBridge,
and Annealed Telegraph Wire, Coppered Bail, Rivet, Screw, Buckle, Uiuoreiiii. Spring, Fence, Broom, Brush, unit liiineis'Wiie.
Wire Mill, Newark, New Jersey.
AGRICULTURAL.
HALL, MOORE & BURKHARDT,
Manufacturers of
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,
Carriage, Buggy A Wagon Material, of ev?ry variety, JEFFERSONV1LLE, 1ND
LUMBER.
J. L. LINDSEY,
COMMISSION LUMBER DEALER,
Office, No. 482 West Front Street,
9
CINCINNATI. OHIO.
DEEDS.
BLANK
Companies supplied
DEEDS, neatly printed, lor sale by
single one, or by the quire, at *tw DAILY
